- Despite her substantial reputation and impressive earning power in Berlin, at the start Holm earned barely 300 Marks a month at the Viennese Volksoper. She had, she later told an interviewer, moved to Vienna only for artistic reasons ("Das habe ich wirklich nur wegen der Kunst so gemacht").
- Although it is the professional relationship with Karajan that is more widely celebrated, she was also able to advise him over a personal problem which arose when the maestro acquired a donkey which his wife found impossible to control.
- She was a member of the ensemble of the Vienna State Opera for twenty-seven years, from 1964 till 1991. It was under the direction of "the doctor", Karl Böhm that she made her first State Opera, appearances but it was Herbert von Karajan who offered her the permanent contract, and under his direction that she enjoyed a stream of successes.
- Since 2009 she has chaired the kuratotium of the Berlin based "Europäische Kulturwerkstatt".
- She lived for most of the year in Vienna, and has for many years hosted cultural events at the 350 year old water mill at Altenmarkt im Thale (north of Vienna), which she acquired back in 1966.
- She was a pupil at the Paul-Gerhardt-Gymnasium, a six kilometer (four mile) cycle journey from her home at Ragow. In Berlin she had attended a single-sex school, and the Paul-Gerhardt-Gymnasium provided her first experience of mixed gender schooling: fifty years later she would still be in touch with two friends - a tenor and a bass - with whom she had formed a school singing trio.
- In 1950 her mother arranged for a meeting with Waltraud Waldeck, a local singer and singing teacher who declared that Renate had a natural singing voice and should take singing lessons. She had already been encouraged with her singing at school, and now Waltraud Waldeck became Renate Franke's first "private" singing teacher.[.
- Renate Holm has continued to give concerts during the present century. She participates in festivals such as the Elblandfestspiele Wittenberge in Germany, and in 2006 she took the role of Viktoria in Mich hätten Sie sehen sollen (If you'd only seen me) at the Theater in der Josefstadt (Vienna) which had its premier in September 2006. She also remained in demand as a teacher of singing and as a jury member in international competitions.
- She made her Volksoper debut with the lead soprano part as Princess Helene in Walzertraum by Oscar Straus.
- At the beginning of the fifties she worked in the local theatre, walking up and down the 150 steps in the auditorium with a large tray full of cigarettes and chocolates for sale pressed against her stomach. Meanwhile she studied privately with the internationally known Coloratura soprano, Maria Ivogün in Berlin and later, after moving to Vienna, with Maria Hittorf.
- In 1953, her mother entered her in a local talent competition. She sang "Lied der Nachtigall" ("Song of the Nightingale") by Franz Grothe. Winning the contest, she was now "discovered" by the RIAS, an American sponsored radio station set up in West Berlin to provide an alternative source of broadcast news and entertainment. (Berlin's existing broadcasting organisation had ended up in the Soviet controlled sector.).
- In 1957, she was engaged by Hubert Marischka to work at the Vienna Volksoper. At the time she had recently received an invitation to star as Eliza Doolittle in the German-language premier of My Fair Lady at the Theater des Westens in Berlin, but by now her sights had already for several years been a firmly set on a career as an opera singer rather than on musicals.
- She says she decided to become an opera singer when she was twelve after being inspired by a film version of Madama Butterfly with Maria Cebotari in the lead role. Her mother had taken her to the cinema as a treat in celebration of an excellent school report.
- Renate's first taste of musical performance came in Lübben as a member of the school and church choir.
- At the beginning of 1953 she quickly established a singing career as a radio "schlager singer", and then broadened her scope to include film music. It was around this time that she changed her professional name from Renate Franke to Renate Holm, in order the avoid confusion with the established Schlager singer Renée Franke.
- Renate Holm was a grand-daughter of General Field Marshall Karl von Bülow (1846-1921).
- During the mid-1950s, Holm appears in several music and Heimatfilms , becoming popular with cinema audiences in German-speaking parts of Europe. Her profile was further enhanced by operetta recordings and radio broadcasts.
- In 1943 her parents separated. That same year women with children were evacuated from the bombed out centre of Berlin, and the Frankes (real last name of Renate Holm) were sent to the Spreewald region roughly 90 km (50 miles) to the east of the city. Appreciative of her new surroundings, she lived out the rest of her childhood in and around the village of Ragow [de] where her mother at one stage served as local mayor and registrar.
- In professional terms, Renate Holm's big breakthrough came when she switched to the Vienna State Opera. Her debut performance here, in 1960, was as the fiancée Gretchen in Wildschütz.
- Renate Holm trained and then worked as a dentists' assistant in order to finance the singing lessons and satisfy her mother's insistence that she should have a "proper trade". (Had the singing career not blossomed, she might have qualified a dentist.).
- For her work, Renate Holm received, the Golden Ring of Honor of the Vienna State Opera (1986) and the Medal of Honor in Gold of the City of Vienna (1987). She received also the Robert Stolz Ring of Honor, the Austrian Cross of Honor for Science and Art 1st Class, the Golden Medal of Honor for services to the state of Vienna and the German Federal Cross of Merit.
- Her wide-ranging repertoire has embraced the classical operatic mainstream, operettas and modern music theatre, along with songs ("Lieder") and concert arias.
- Her numerous operatic recordings were made not just for the mainstream record companies such as EMI, Decca and Polydor, but also for the radio. In particular, Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR) have made many recordings featuring Renate Holm with the conductor and operetta specialist Franz Marszalek: these include such rarities as "Wenn Liebe erwacht" (When Love Awakens) by Eduard Künneke.
- She has been resident in Austria for more than sixty years.
- Once she had been talent-spotted by Karajan, Renate Holm appeared in many of the world's great opera houses, performing alongside the great stars of her generation.
- Holm's artistic career has lasted for more than fifty years, but she has remained faithful to Vienna's Popular Opera ("Volksoper") and the Vienna State Opera.
- In 1971 she was bestowed with the honorific title "Österreichische Kammersängerin", nominated for this badge of establishment recognition by the State Opera.
- Frequent stage partners included Rudolf Schock, Fritz Wunderlich, Hermann Prey and Peter Minich.
- In 1986 and 1987, on the recommendation of Gerhard Gutruf [de] (who had founded it), she served as president of the "Weinviertler Kultursommer" and under its auspices headed up master classes in singing at its annual summer arts event festivals between 1983 and 1990.
- She has made a speciality of Wienerlieder (literally, "Viennese songs").
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